4.4 Article

The first mitochondrial genome for the wasp superfamily Platygastroidea: the egg parasitoid Trissolcus basalis

Journal

GENOME
Volume 55, Issue 3, Pages 194-204

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/G2012-005

Keywords

mitochondrial; Hymenoptera; Proctotrupomorpha; Trissolcus; gene rearrangement; phylogenetic relationship

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB-0614764]
  2. College of Arts & Sciences of The Ohio State University
  3. Dorothy Fund
  4. Josef Knull Fund

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The nearly complete mitochondrial (mt) genome of an egg parasitoid, Trissolcus basalis (Wollaston), was sequenced using both 454 and Illumina next-generation sequencing technologies. A portion of the noncoding region remained unsequenced, possibly owing to the presence of repeats. The sequenced portion of the genome is 15 768 bp and has a high A+T content (84.2%), as is typical for hymenopteran mt genomes. A total of 36 of the 37 genes normally present in animal mt genomes were located. The one exception was trnR; a truncated version of this gene is present between trnS(1) and nd5, but it is unclear whether this gene fragment could code for the entire trnR gene. The mt gene arrangement of T. basalis is different from other Proctotrupomorpha mt genomes, with a number of trn genes in different positions. However, no shared derived gene rearrangements were identified in the present study. Bayesian analyses of mt genomes from 29 hymenopteran taxa and seven other orders of holometabolous insects support some uncontroversial evolutionary relationships, but indicate that much higher levels of taxonomic sampling are necessary for the resolution of family and superfamily relationships.

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